Page:Castes and Tribes of Southern India, Volume 7.djvu/295

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USIRA

(b) In the month Vyāsi (March- April) a large trough is placed close to a well, and filled with a mixture of salt and water. The cattle, decorated with leaves and flowers, are brought, one by one, to the trough, and made to drink the salt water.

Uril Parisha. — A class of Mūssad.

Urū.— Ur, Urū, meaning village, is the name of a division of Bēdar, Bōya, Golla, Korava, Kuruba, Mādiga, and Oddē. The Bēdars and Bōyas are divided into two main divisions, Urū or those who dwell in villages, and Myāsa (grass-land or forest people) who live away from villages. In like manner, the Urū Oddes are those who have abandoned a nomad life, and settled in villages. Among some of the Tamil cultivating classes, the headman is known as the Ur Goundan.

Ur-Udaiyān (lord of a village). — A synonym of Nattamān,

Urukathi (a kind of knife). — An exogamous sept of Toreva.

Urukkāran, a class of Muhammadan pilots and sailors in the Laccadive islands. (See Māppilla.)

Urumikkāran.— The Urumikkārans, or those who play on the drum (urumi), are said *[1] to be "Tottiyans in Madura, and Parayans elsewhere." The Kāppiliyans say that they migrated with the Urumikkārans from the banks of the Tungabadra river, because the Tottiyans tried to ravish their women. At a Kāppiliyan wedding, a Urumikkāran must be present at the distribution of betel on the second day, and at the final death ceremonies a Urumikkāran must also be present.

Usira (usirika, Phyllanthus Emblica). — A sept of Kōmati.

  1. * Madras Census Report, 1901,